In the future, most people have come to be comfortable with their DNA information.

From early life they have been told mostly what it means by healthcare professionals, teachers, and family. At the moment of live birth a copy of everyone’s unique DNA is on a website. It is very useful as an easily accessible proof of identity. Worldwide organizations can also make use of the connections provided by an individual’s genetic history. What could possibly go wrong with having a copy of one’s DNA available online?

A wise person knows what they can control and what they can not.

GIVE ME A MOMENT a lifestyle

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"...draws with pencils -- not quickly." Writing under the obliquely oxymoronic moniker QwkDrw, I fancy this blog an internet-based “column”; articles often beginning with a descriptive photo. The posts, sometimes written in series, are easily further researched by readers with links to sources, photos, video clips, and additional information. This blog is not represented as authoritative and complete -- it is a sort of brief synopsis or abridged digest version of larger matters condensed from one perhaps inexpert perspective into a reasonable amount of reading time. The topics here might be interesting to someone also of my background and may or may not be more widely appealing.
2014 Blog Award: 10 Hot Readers and their Blogs. "#4. QwkDrw - Possibly one of the first commenters on my blog the mysterious QwkDrw has stuck around... I love his sense of humor." Annabel Candy, "Get in the Hot Spot" blog.